Jakarta, Oct 23 (Antara) - Newly installed President Joko
Widodo failed in his plan to announce the lineup of his cabinet on
Wednesday as he has to replace some prospective ministers following
scrutiny by the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK).
Joko Widodo, better known as Jokowi, has planned to announce his
ministers on Wednesday but the announcement was later delayed.
"The
names of ministers in the cabinet lineup will soon be announced today,
either in the morning or afternoon," President Jokowi said during a
friendly gathering with Jakarta provincial administrations officials at
the Jakarta governor's official house in Menteng area on Wednesday
morning.
Jokowi remarked that the announcement will probably take place at one
of several locations such as Pluit, Tanjung Priok in North Jakarta, or
Tanah Abang in Central Jakarta.
"It is serious. We will announce the cabinet lineup today either in
Tanah Abang, Tanjung Priok, Pluit, or other location," the newly
installed president noted.
There is no immediate information as to why the announcement was
postponed, yet KPK Chairman Abraham Samad has said ministerial
candidates who have got the red and yellow marks were not recommended.
President Jokowo's Transition Team has earlier submitted a list of 43
ministerial candidates to the KPK for studying the track record of those
selected. The KPK submitted its view to the President later.
In its scrutiny, the anti-graft body gave yellow and red marks to
candidates who had the potentials to be implicated in legal cases.
"The (implication of) yellow and red marks are the same. The figures
whose marks are yellow and red should not be selected as ministers,"
Samad told journalists in response to the issue of President Joko
Widodo's cabinet lineup.
Abraham
Samad said he had just come to the Merdeka Palace to explain the
meaning of red and yellow marks to the head of state.
"Jokowi must show his determination and leadership while selecting
personnel for his cabinet structure. This is because about 40 percent of
his prospective cabinet ministers are problematic," Ubedilah Badrun,
the executive director of the Indonesian Social and Political Study
Center (Puspol Indonesia), stated.
Ubedillah, who is a lecturer at the Jakarta State University (UNJ),
stressed Jokowi must select his ministers from outside the community of
capitalists and political party circles.
According to him, some 40 percent of the names that Jokowi submitted to
the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) for examinations were given
yellow marks by the anti-graft body.
They are believed to be problematic in terms of integrity and anti-corruption commitment.
Political
observer Victor Silaen said President Jokowi should follow the KPK
recommendations. "It would be better for Jokowi to name 'clean'
ministers. He should remember that the KPK is serious about tackling
corruption cases," Silaen stated.
Jokowi had submitted the list of ministers he wished to appoint in his
cabinet to the KPK to have their credibility checked. After looking into
their backgrounds, the anti-graft body returned its results to Jokowi.
Silaen added that ministers who had been marked red in the KPK
examinations would continue to remain in the spotlight of the anti-graft
body. He further noted that if Jokowi went ahead and chose ministers
that the KPK warned him against, the public could feel misled and assume
that Jokowi was not determined to fight against corruption.
"Sooner or later, Jowoki would lose the public's support," he added.
According to KPK Chief Abraham Samad, if President Joko Widodo (Jokowi)
appoints ministers categorized as problematic by the KPK, then his
government will not be clean.
"It is simple to judge it. The people will judge it unclean if
problematic cabinet ministers are appointed, as that will reflect on the
government," Samad stated at the KPK building on Wednesday.
On Friday (Oct 17), Jokowo's Transition Team submitted a list of 43
ministerial candidates to the KPK for studying the track record of those
selected.
"The KPK has an obligation to inform the President about the
eligibility of his ministerial candidates. It should be made clear.
There should be no grey area in this matter," the KPK chief noted.
This means, if KPK's recommendation is ignored, then it will reject the
appointment of the (problematic) ministers. "The KPK's position is
clear, that it will reject those who are problematic," he added.
"It will mean the government is not responsive. The KPK's objective is
to give recommendations, so that the people are led by clean leaders
with integrity. The public officials of this country should have
integrity," he stressed.
In the meantime, President Jokowi is reported on Wednesday that he
would replace eight prospective ministers in keeping with the
recommendation of the antigraft body and the Financial Transaction
Reports and Analysis Center (PPATK). Jokowi has also asked the
assistance of the PPATK to trace the track records of his prospective
ministers.
"We
have submitted it (the ministerial candidates' names) to the PPATK and
KPK, and there are eight names that were not allowed. That is all. I
will not mention their names," President Jokowi stated at the State
Palace's yard on Wednesday.
President Jokowi declined from informing the press whether the eight
names rejected by the KPK belonged to any political parties. He
confirmed that the process of replacing the eight ministerial candidates
with the new ones is underway.
Thus, the planned announcement of cabinet lineup was still postponed on Wednesday.***1***
(T.A014/O001)
(T.SYS/A/A. Abdussalam/O. Tamindael) 23-10-2014 09:00 |
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar